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Thursday, January 8, 2015

Heartland Financial USA Downgraded to Neutral at Zacks (NASDAQ:HTLF)


Heartland Financial USA Inc logoZacks downgraded shares of Heartland Financial USA (NASDAQ:HTLF) from an outperform rating to a neutral rating in a research note released on Monday morning. They currently have $29.80 target price on the stock. Zacks has also taken action a number of other financials stocks recently. The firm reiterated its neutral rating on shares of Cullen/Frost Bankers, Inc.. They have a $74.00 price target on that stock. Also, Zacks downgraded shares of Banco Latinoamericano Comerc Exterior SA from an outperform rating to a neutral rating. Their analysts now have a $37.10 price target on that stock. Finally, Zacks reiterated its neutral rating on shares of BancorpSouth, Inc.. They have a $23.00 price target on that stock. Separately, analysts at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods reiterated a market perform rating on shares of Heartland Financial USA in a research note on Tuesday, October 28th. They now have a $28.50 price target on the stock, up previously from $28.00. Shares of Heartland Financial USA (NASDAQ:HTLF) traded up 0.95% during mid-day trading on Monday, hitting $27.74. 22,776 shares of the company’s stock traded hands. Heartland Financial USA has a 1-year low of $22.38 and a 1-year high of $29.20. The stock has a 50-day moving average of $26.11 and a 200-day moving average of $24.78. The company has a market cap of $512.6 million and a price-to-earnings ratio of 13.96. Heartland Financial USA (NASDAQ:HTLF) last issued its quarterly earnings data on Monday, October 27th. The company reported $0.63 earnings per share for the quarter, beating the analysts’ consensus estimate of $0.54 by $0.09. During the same quarter last year, the company posted $0.38 earnings per share. On average, analysts predict that Heartland Financial USA will post $2.12 earnings per share for the current fiscal year. Heartland Financial USA, Inc (NASDAQ:HTLF) is a multi-bank holding company. To get a free copy of the research report on Heartland Financial USA (HTLF), click here. For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com Receive News & Ratings for Heartland Financial USA Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for Heartland Financial USA and related companies with Analyst Ratings Network's FREE daily email newsletter.

Personal finance Q&A: What will my Medicare Part B premium be?


Robert Powell, Special to USA TODAY 6:46 a.m. EST January 6, 2015 7/18/2014 11:38:08 AM -- Swampscott, MA, U.S.A -- USA TODAY personal finance advice columnist, Robert Powell -- Photo by Josh T. Reynolds for USA WEEKEND ORG XMIT: JR 131396 USAW - personal 7/18/2014 [Via MerlinFTP Drop](Photo: Josh T. Reynolds, for USA WEEKEND) Q: I am 66 years old and normally in the 10% federal income tax bracket. Since taking Social Security, I have never earned enough money to have to pay any taxes on my Social Security. In 2014, I sold my only rental income property for a long-term capital gain of about $110,000. I know that I will not have to pay federal taxes on this long-term capital gain since I am in the 10% bracket. But, will I have to pay higher Medicare premiums on my Part B (I currently pay $104 per month)? And will this sale cause me to pay taxes on my Social Security benefits? In 2014, I will report less than $2,000 in interest, receive about $7,500 in Social Security, have a net loss of about $500 from rental real estate, and have about $110,000 in a long-term capital gain. Joyce Aldawood, Hoffman Estates, Ill. A: If modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) is greater than $85,000 as an individual or $170,000 as a couple, Medicare B premiums will increase in 2016 for income made in 2014, says Carolyn McClanahan, M.D., a certified financial planner with Life Planning Partners in Jacksonville, Fla. How much more you'll pay for your Medicare Part B premium in 2016 will depend on your MAGI. For example, if you filed an individual tax return and your yearly income in 2013 was greater than $85,000 up to $107,000, your Medicare Part B premium would be $146.90 per month in 2015. That's what most people — about 95% of Medicare beneficiaries — pay. But, if your income in 2013 was greater than $107,000 the Medicare Part B premium for 2015 could be anywhere from $146.90 to $335.70 per month. MAGI, FYI, is the total of your adjusted gross income and tax-exempt interest income. Read Medicare Premiums: Rules For Higher-Income Beneficiaries. The good news for you is that the amount you pay can change each year depending on your income. Also worth noting: If you have to pay a higher amount for your Part B premium and you disagree with Uncle Sam you can use this form to contact Social Security. Learn more about Medicare Part B premiums here. In addition, since your income will be above $34,000 as an individual or $44,000 as a couple, 85% of Social Security will be taxed on the 2014 tax return, says McClanahan. One additional comment: If you have taken depreciation on the rental property, part of the gain will be taxed as ordinary income as recapture of depreciation, not as capital gains. This will result in a significantly higher tax bill than what you may be expecting. So, consult a good accountant to be prepared for the outcome, says McClanahan. Robert Powell is editor of Retirement Weekly, contributes regularly to USA TODAY, The Wall Street Journal and MarketWatch and teaches at Boston University. Read or Share this story: http://usat.ly/1IkbyS9

Kevin Hart Has 1 Rule for Planning His Wedding


By Jacqueline Andriakos @jandriakos 01/08/2015 AT 06:30 AM EST Kevin Hart has learned the trick to keep calm and marry on. Speaking to reporters at the Los Angeles premiere of his movie The Wedding Ringer on Tuesday, the soon-to-be groom, 35, shared a little wedding wisdom he learned from playing a best man in the comedy. (It opens Jan. 16.) "What [the movie] helped me do is get out of the way," Hart said. So, who is he letting call the shots? His bride-to-be, Eniko Parrish. "You do what you want, here's a budget, let me know when you're done," he said about handing off the reins. "Just don't go past this number. That's it!" The funnyman, who snagged the PEOPLE Magazine Award for Comedy Star of the Year, popped the question in an Instagram-worthy fashion at his fiancĂ©e's 30th birthday party in August. "On this perfect day I chose to make the most perfect decision," Hart said before getting down on one knee in the clip posted on Parrish's Instagram account. And who will be best man? • Reporting by NICOLE SANDS

Six things that happened at People's Choice


At 93-years-old, Betty White is still the people's choice. She accepted the Television Icon Award at the 2015 People's Choice Awards on Wednesday. VPC Video Transcript Automatically Generated Transcript (may not be 100% accurate) 00:00 And these people's choice for favorite TV icon is. Betty 00:05 why. Hammer crimes have been saying thank you. Or can you 00:19 imagine. The people's choice. Yeah so he. It. It's my favorite 00:40 actress continued TV series in the same with me. But yeah. 00:52 Thank you sound Iran's Betsy Beers and Peter no law. Forward 00:56 thinking about leading lady who looks like my classic beauty. Both 01:13 sides are favored Nippon cargo. Did take your time yeah. A 01:20 like I said any yeah. This is perfect for me because 01:33 I love people. I'm crazy about movies. And and I prefer 01:39 people who love my movies are so I'm I'm actually very 01:41 grateful I guess I'll keep my day job. Please award for 01:46 favorite and humanitarian. To Ben Affleck. The one way to combat. 01:51 The the sad things we see the terrible things that we 01:54 see is to try to bring a little bit of kindness 01:57 and to the world. People's Choice Award winner Charles Kelley of Lady Antebellum and Melissa McCarthy share a moment backstage at the People's Choice Awards.(Photo: Frazer Harrison) Sure, Chris Evans may not get any Oscar love this year. As Captain America, though, he's now an award-winning fan favorite. "I don't win stuff, so this kind of cool," Evans said Wednesday night while accepting the honor for action-movie actor at the People's Choice Awards, the annual populist affair where fans get to vote for their favorites. The Captain America: The Winter Soldier star figured that "40 percent of the votes were my mom, and the other 60 percent means a lot to me." USA TODAY Who won People's Choice Awards? The People's Choice Awards also marked the first televised show of this awards season and, as co-host Allison Janney joked, "You get to see all the stars before they get down to Oscar weight." Chris Evans accepts the People's Choice Award for favorite Chris Evans accepts the People's Choice Award for favorite action-movie actor.(Photo: Kevin Winter, Getty Images) Here are six highlights from the night: Melissa McCarthy wows the crowd. TheTammy star walked the red carpet, where many noticed her slimmer figure, and then she won favorite comedic movie actress, the first award of the telecast. She thanked those who buy movie tickets: "Without you, I wouldn't have a job and I'll stay around as long as you'll have me." ENTERTAIN THIS! Hunter Hayes on singing for President Obama: 'It was nuts' One-man wardrobe malfunction. Before he even arrived, Lady Antebellum's Charles Kelley had an awards night snafu when he ripped a small hole in the inseam of his Dolce & Gabbana suit pants. Kelley didn't take out on the designer, though. "You have to just blame whoever altered it," he joked after showing the rip to E!'s Giuliana Rancic. His night did get better: The jeans he changed into later stayed intact through a rousing rendition of the band's single Freestyle and an acceptance speech for favorite country group, in which Kelley told presenter Lisa Edelstein she looks "hot" on her new show, Girlfriends' Guide to Divorce. ENTERTAIN THIS! Wow! Melissa McCarthy shows off slimmer figure on People's Choice red carpet Kevin Hart and Josh Gad steal the spotlight. Kaley Cuoco-Sweeting won her second consecutive award for network comedic TV actress and her sitcom The Big Bang Theory won its fourth network TV comedy honor, plus overall favorite TV show. But she was upstaged by her Wedding Ringer co-stars Hart and Gad when presenting McCarthy's award. Hart walked out filming himself with three selfie sticks, prompting Gad to call him "the Steven Spielberg of selfie sticks." Gad also joked that he was working on a reality show called American Gaddiator, "where I fight the cast of Frozen in a cage." Viola Davis with her People's Choice Award for 'How Viola Davis with her People's Choice Award for 'How to Get Away With Murder.'(Photo: Frazer Harrison) How to get away with the last laugh. Last fall, a New York Times TV critic called How to Get Away With Murder star Viola Davis "less classically beautiful," but the actress won a little bit of sweet yet classy revenge. After winning favorite actress in a new TV series, she thanked Murder executive producers Shonda Rhimes and Betsy Beers for "thinking of a leading lady who looks like my classy beauty." ENTERTAIN THIS! So, do the 'Black-ish' kids fight like brother and sister off-screen, too? Ben Affleck honors the "real humanitarians." Amy Adams presented her friend (and Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice co-star) Ben Affleck with the People's Choice Award for favorite humanitarian, honoring his work to bring peace and prosperity to the Eastern Congo. "I've been called a lot of things in my life but I'm not sure until recently that humanitarian has been one of them," said a humble Affleck, who dedicated the award to "the real humanitarians" he works with on the ground in Africa. "Sometimes the world is a scary and terrible place and bad things happen. … One way to combat the sad things we see and terrible things we see is to bring a little bit of kindness to the world." ENTERTAIN THIS! Oh snap! Viola Davis fires back at 'New York Times' diss in classiest way possible Fans' choice for favorite movie actor: Robert Downey Fans' choice for favorite movie actor: Robert Downey Jr., of course.(Photo: Kevin Winter, Getty Images) Robert Downey's keeping his day job, folks. One of the biggest hits of the night was Robert Downey Jr., who ran his People's Choice lifetime total to five wins, picking up awards for favorite movie actor and dramatic actor. "This is perfect for me because I love people, I'm crazy about movies and I prefer people who love my movies," said the star of The Judge. "I guess I'll keep my day job." Contributing: Cindy Clark Autoplay Show Thumbnails Show Captions Last SlideNext Slide Read or Share this story: http://usat.ly/1ItGU8R

Phylicia Rashad Says Her Defense of Bill Cosby Was Misquoted


By Lanford Beard @lanfordbeard 01/07/2015 AT 09:30 PM EST Phylicia Rashad is setting the record straight about her recent comments defending her former costar Bill Cosby. In an exclusive interview on World News Tonight with David Muir Wednesday night, Rashad, 66, said remarks attributed to her in Roger Friedman's Showbiz 411 column Tuesday – in which she was quoted as saying, "Forget these women" – are not accurate. "That is not what I said. What I said is, 'this is not about the women. This is about something else. This is about the obliteration of legacy.'" "I am a woman," Rashad continued. "I would never say such a thing." In a clarification posted on his site Wednesday night, Freedman wrote: "Let me clear something. I did not misquote Phylicia Rashad. But she didn't mean for it to be taken the way it was, and I should have punctuated. There was NEVER the meaning in 'Forget those women' that she was saying to actually forget or dismiss then. She meant, 'those women aside' – as in, she's not talking about that, she's talking about Cosby’s legacy being destroyed." Speaking to ABC, Rashad declined to comment about the myriad of accusations facing her former costar. "I can't speak to those things and wouldn't want to." The interview comes in the wake of a press conference Wednesday called by attorney Gloria Allred in which three more women came forward to accuse Cosby of sexual assault. Before the women gave their statements, Allred had several pointed comments to make about Rashad. "Phylicia, you should be supporting these women," the attorney said. "Phylicia, if anyone did to you or to your daughter, your sister or or your mother, what Cosby is alleged to have done to these women, I have no doubt that you would not be saying forget these women." The full interview with Rashad airs Thursday at 12:35 a.m. ET on ABC's Nightline.

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Are you paying too much for textbooks?


The price of textbooks, like the hidden charges on your credit card, can put a hole in your wallet, making it harder to afford simple pleasures. If you’re just picking up your textbooks at the campus bookstore, you’re doing it wrong. Here are some tips on how to save big on textbooks. Price hunting You can go just about anywhere and find those text books for Lit 101 or Biology cheaper than you’ll find them on campus, but there are a few great sites that have figured out how to search for the best price on books. Bigwords has set out to “protect the universe from high textbook” prices. Simply enter the name of each textbook and add it to your bookbag by clicking “buy or rent.” We’ll get to the “rent” part. Then you can start the price comparison. CampusBooks works much the same way, and in many ways is a preferable site, as it searches thousands of well-known sellers, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Chegg (another great site). In many cases, used books are your best bet. Often, it cost just as much to rent a book as it does to buy one. Even if it’s a few dollars more expensive, at the end of the semester, you can sell you textbook back. Plenty of sites (and maybe even your campus bookstore) offer to buy back texts, including Amazon, Chegg, Barnes & Noble, BookByte, Alibris and many more. Rent Chegg is great for renting and sites like Bigwords and CampusBooks give you more options. Other standouts are CampusBookRentals, BookRenter and Textbooks.com. Going digital Going digital isn’t always cheaper (or easier) but there are a lot of benefits. Whether you’re using an iPad, Kindle, Nook, computer or other device, an internet connection and the ability to highlight passages and search through textbooks with keywords offers a lot to busy students. Beyond Apple, Amazon and Barnes and Noble, CourseSmart will let you read online or via a copy-protected PDF and they have a mobile app. CourseSmart brags that “users have access to over 90% of core higher education titles used today as eTextbooks, and the largest catalog of eResources and digital course materials available.” Kindle and Nook owners /app users can also rent text books. Scholarship What? Yeah. There are lots of scholarship opportunities out there. One is Textbooks for a Year Scholarship. It’s an essay contest, more or less, and it gives students the opportunity to win enough to buy their textbooks for a whole year. There are tons of options out there to save on textbooks. This just scratches the surface. But, make sure you buy your books early. Don’t wait to order on the first day of class. Get a hold of your syllabus or visit the campus bookstore to see what you’ll need for the semester and order before you’re given your first homework assignment.

Friday, January 2, 2015

China Property Developer Defaults on HSBC Loan


hed In Belgium, Battle Builds Between Brewers and ‘Beer Architects’ Expat Treasures From Home Help Bridge the Distance: A Taiwanese Expat in the U.S. Small Business Economy Boosts Small-Business Optimism NY Heard & Scene Cultural Evolution: What’s On in 2015 World News France’s Piketty Refuses State Honor Gear Learn to Embrace the Digital Detox Technology Making Change: Mobile Pay in Africa Economy PLAY Yield-Hungry European Investors Face Tough 2015 New property owner begins building a home on former 'swamp of doom' in Ann Arbor neighborhood For several years, a large cement pit in a southeast Ann Arbor neighborhood that residents labeled "the swamp of doom" was a constant source of irritation and frustration for residents upset with the owner and city over the property. The half-finished home foundation filled with water when it rained, and, as it continued deteriorating, wildlife took up residence and it became a danger for neighborhood kids. Now, the old foundation has been cleared, the pit filled, plans for a new home approved and work on the house is underway. "They got the new foundation in, the wall framed in and they're doing well. It's a new person in charge of it. The old owner's uncle," said Ralph Welton, the city's chief development official. "The neighbors are happy." Early in the year, Ann Arbor City Council Member Stephen Kunselman, who lives nearby, circulated photos of ducks floating on the swamp's waters and called for the city to press its former owner, Mahmoud Alkahla, to address the situation. Officials discovered the backfill around the pit was actually composed of old tires, car parts, lumber and other debris covered in soil. After months of pressure from the city in mid-2014, Alkahla hired a contractor to remove the foundation at 3300 Nordman Drive, but the pit remained for months. In September, Alkhala, at the city's behest, finally quit-claimed the property to his uncle, who is now managing the project and hiring contractors to complete work. "He's got paid contractors doing everything and it looks very good," Welton said."I've been by there and there have been inspections. It's moving along." Alkahla demolished a home on the property after purchasing it out of foreclosure in 2010, then planned a 2,000-square-foot house. But instead of hiring a construction company or contractors to execute those plans, Alkahla moved forward on the foundation project alone, despite having no prior homebuilding experience, Welton said. The foundation was poured with plywood forms instead of steel forms as is standard, and the plywood forms blew out during the first pour in 2012. The city ordered the property cleared and secured in June. Tom Perkins is a freelance writer for The Ann Arbor News.

Top 10 Finance stories of 2014


177039372 Another year is in the books. But before we jump head-first into 2015, we’re taking one last look at the most-popular CFO Daily News stories of the past year. Based on your clicks, these are the top 10 stories of 2014. 10. Warning: DOL found three-fourths of 401(k)s illegal Here’s a very compelling reason to take a closer look at your 401(k) plan: Seventy-five percent of the 401(k)s audited by the DOL last year resulted in plan sponsors being fined, penalized or forced to make reimbursements for plan errors. And those fines and penalties weren’t cheap. 9. The 20 most annoying buzzwords at work You know them when you hear them: those words and phrases thrown around in meetings and in memos that just make you groan. 8. 25 passwords no one in Finance should be using You’d think by now that everyone knows that “password” and “111111″ don’t make for a secure password. Well, if they do, it seems they don’t care. 7. Sneak peek: How IRS expects you to report health coverage next year For years now, employers knew they’d soon have to start reporting their employee health coverage under the Affordable Care Act. Then earlier this summer, some help: Draft forms were finally released of the information returns you and your finance staffers would have to use. 6. 21 best Excel shortcuts — all in one place Love ’em or loathe ’em, spreadsheets are the lifeblood of any Finance department. Why not make it as easy on yourself as possible? Here’s a collection of the best Excel shortcuts. 5. Obama to overhaul overtime rules: What it means for Finance Get ready! There are some big changes in store for your payroll department. 4. Workers gone wild: 7 outrageous cases of employee fraud For some rogue staffers, lifting office supplies or seeking reimbursement on a few minor “non-business related” charges is mere child’s play. 3. Do you and your staffers know these 10 ‘power’ Excel skills? You probably consider yourself pretty adept at using Excel. The same hopefully goes for your finance staffers. 2. New IRS rules impact A/P, leave Payroll out Put your Accounts Payable department on alert: It’s in for some changes when it comes to its key year-end task: 1099s. 1. IRS creates $36K per-worker Obamacare fine If you were planning on sending workers out onto the insurance exchanges with a lump-sum of cash for premium costs, you’ll want to read the feds’ latest warning. Campaign-Finance Bondage [unable to retrieve full-text content]Campaign-finance reformers claim to oppose “big money” in politics, but more often small citizen groups get caught in the webs that regulate political speech. That’s what has happened in Arizona, where a federal court recently formalized a decision ...

Finance ministry mulls roping in private professionals for top job at PSBs


PUNE: The finance ministry is considering a proposal to rope in professionals from the private sector for appointment of chairman and CEO-cum-managing director in state-owned financial institutions as it looks for talent from a wider pool of applicants. "Private sector candidates may be allowed for both the post of chairman and MD& CEO," a senior finance ministry official said. "If the search committee recommends a candidate all such issues like higher compensation package can be looked at," the official said. The changes can only be made by appointments committee of the Cabinet (ACC) headed by prime minister Narendra Modi, the official added. Earlier this week, the government kick-started the management reforms of public sector banks, splitting the post of chairman and managing director-cum-CEO. Recently, the RBI in a paper, 'Management and Governance issues in PSBs,' had recommended that the selection process should be left to an independent panel of experts through open-market, global advertisements for the chairman's post. It had further recommended that such executives be paid salaries that are comparable with those in other industries. However, given the structure it is unlikely that any one from private sector would apply for post as remuneration level is quite low. This is also evident from the fact that recent selection process for Coal India's CMD did not see any professional from private sector expressing interest for the top job at the world's largest coal miner. The government head-hunter Public Enterprises Selection Board (PESB) ended up selecting a bureaucrat out of 12 who had applied for the top job. Experts said government may seek applications from the private sector but it is quite unlikely that anyone would apply for the post because of huge difference in salary. Meeting criteria for the post of top executive of the public sector banks would also be difficult and it would be difficult to get their vigilance clearance and other regulatory clearances, official said. If approved, this would be for the first time that government would invite applications from private sector for the top posts of state-owned banks. So far, CMDs of PSU banks were selected from public sector banks only. In the last UPA government an attempt was made to bring in a private sector professional in India Infrastructure Finance Company (IIFCL), a wholly owned subsidiary of the government. The then prime minister Manmohan Singh rejected the name of Deepak Bagla, a partner with London-based private equity firm 3i, recommended by the Finance Ministry for the post of chairman and managing director of IIFCL.

What Moves the Stock Market?


With the stock market’s unexpected boom toward the end of 2014, what better way to ring in the new year than to reexamine that age-old question: What drives stock returns? Is it earnings’ growth fundamentals or short-term momentum swings in investor behavior? The answer matters because most forecasters expect the economy to grow faster this year than in 2014, which argues for another good year for the market. But many traders will tell you that investors’ emotions matter a lot more. One emotional strategy has long attracted interest among financial economists: “momentum trading,” or buying as long as the market is going up, or short-selling when the market is headed in the other direction. Various studies have suggested that, at least for professional money managers who can buy and sell stocks in volume and keep their transaction costs low, this strategy can generate superior returns, even adjusted for the risk of periodic crashes. A December study by three economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago confirms this result. The economists came to this conclusion by looking at stock returns during the “Victorian era,” in the second half of the 19th century, as well as from 1927 and 2012. Momentum trading paid off in both periods. This was true even when, according to the authors, the risk of a stock market crash seemed high: Investors poured money in and wanted it invested, so they kept pushing up prices until bubbles burst. Does that mean that individual investors should try to be momentum investors too? No. Even with low brokerage commissions, the trading costs would eat away any superior returns. In addition, many investors don’t have stomach to bear the costs of those crashes. So what’s the individual investor to do? Stick to the standard advice: Don’t try to time the market. If you have cash to invest, do it gradually and consistently (the “dollar cost” average way to invest), adjust your mix of stocks and bonds to your age (the older you are, the less of the former and more of the latter), and put your stock money in index funds. It’s hard to do, but it’s best to sit back and not let emotional reactions to daily news tempt you to move your money around too much. Let’s also hope the world will be a better place this year than the one before. Robert Litan is a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the author of “Trillion Dollar Economists.” He is on Twitter: @BobLitan. ALSO IN THINK TANK: A ‘Moon Shot’ Goal for Computer Programming Protecting Entrepreneurs Amid a Push for Health-Care Reform The Certain Benefits of Long-Term Tax Policy ______________________________________________________ Capital Journal Daybreak Newsletter: Sign up to get the latest on politics, policy and defense delivered to your inbox every morning. For the latest Washington news, For outside analysis,

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Comparing America's 3 Largest Internet Service Providers


Summary The Internet Service Providers industry is expected to outperform the S&P broader market substantially this quarter, underperform significantly next quarter, then outperform significantly in 2015 and beyond. Mean and high targets for the 3 largest U.S. Internet Service Providers companies – Trulia Inc, United Online, Spark Networks - range from 16% to 81% above current prices. Find out which among Trulia, United and Spark offers the best stock performance and investment value. * All data are as of the close of Wednesday, December 31, 2014. Emphasis is on company fundamentals and financial data rather than commentary. To understand what types of companies the Internet Service Providers industry contains, we need to make some distinctions, as the category is not as self-explanatory as one might think. Oddly enough, the Internet Service Providers industry does NOT include internet service providers. Mention "internet service providers" and we automatically think of companies that provide access to the internet through television cables, telephone lines, or wireless satellite systems. But those internet "access" providers are categories into various other industries, such as: • the Telecom Services industry - which includes Verizon (NYSE: VZ), AT&T (NYSE: T), CenturyLink (NYSE: CTL) and others, which industry is compared here, • the CATV Systems industry - which includes DirectTV (NASDAQ: DTV), Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC), and Dish Network (NASDAQ: DISH) and others, which industry is compared here, and • the Entertainment Diversified industry - which includes Comcast (NASDAQ: CMCSA) and others, which industry is compared here. No, the Internet Service Providers industry being covered in this comparison is limited to companies that provide services over the internet, not service to the internet. If you ask me, they could easily avoid the confusion simply by adding one letter to the industry's title, calling it "Internet Services Providers" instead of "Internet Service Providers". But that would mean writers like me would have less to write about. So now that we have that whole mess straightened out, just what kinds of internet services do the largest three U.S. companies in the space provide? • Trulia, Inc. (NYSE: TRLA), headquartered in San Francisco, California, provides an online platform for locating homes for sale or rent, helping not just buyers and renters search for their next residence but also enabling real estate professionals to market their listings. The company's platform supplies such information as a home's nearby schools, crime rates, neighborhood amenities, home values, and local community services. It should be noted that Trulia's largest competitor - Zillow, Inc. (NASDAQ: Z), which provides similar home buying and renting information - is actually categorized into a different industry, the Property Management industry in the Financial sector. This is most likely because Zillow also allows borrowers to connect with mortgage lenders, even though the company does not offer any financial services per se. These classifications never cease to amaze. • United Online, Inc. (NASDAQ: UNTD), headquartered in Woodland Hills, California, provides social networking services and products under the Classmates, StayFriends, and Trombi brand names, which include social platforms that enable users to locate and interact with acquaintances from their past. It also offers dial-up Internet access services under the NetZero and Juno brand names, providing mobile broadband, DSL, email, Internet security, and Web hosting services. So there you go… this one does live up to its industry's name. • Spark Networks, Inc. (NYSE: LOV), headquartered in Los Angeles, California, provides online personals services and dating services for singles to meet, participate in community events, and form relationships through its principal sites ChristianMingle.com targeting Christian singles and JDate.com targets Jewish singles. It also offers travel and other recreational events, including weekend getaways, dinners, speed dating events, or other meeting events. Yet as popular as these online services may be, the companies' stocks have not provided very good service to investors on a relative basis, as per the graph below. Since the recovery began in March of 2009, where the broader market S&P 500 index [black] has gained 205% and the SPDR Technology sector ETF (NYSE: XLK) [blue] has gained 212%, only one of the three companies here compared has come close to the two benchmarks - namely Trulia [beige], which has risen 90% in its short 2.5 year publicly traded history, averaging a comparable rate of growth. For their part, United [purple] has gained 180%, while Spark [orange] has been rather unattractive with gains of just 55%. On an annualized basis, where the S&P has averaged 35.65% and XLK has averaged 36.87%, Spark has averaged 9.57%, United has averaged 31.30%, and Trulia has averaged 37.24% per year. These would still be great returns in any normal period. But the recovery since 2009 has not been a normal period, and much better returns have been found elsewhere. (click to enlarge) Source: BigCharts.com Looking at future earnings growth, the Internet "Services" Providers industry (we may as well call it by its clearer name) as a whole is expected to out-provide the broader market considerably, as tabled below where green indicates outperformance while yellow denotes underperformance. In the current quarter, the industry is seen outgrowing the market's growth rate at some 3.13 times its average, before slowing to a lesser but still robust rate of 2.68 times in 2015, and 2.21 times annually over the next five years. (click to enlarge) Zooming-in a little closer, the earnings growth rates of our three competitors look very promising, as tabled below. Although Trulia's and United's earnings are seen shrinking in the current quarter, both companies are seen growing in leaps and bounds going forward - with United beating the S&P's average growth at 13.97 times next quarter, and Trulia beating it at 21.63 times in 2015. But the earnings sparks fly for Spark as well, without a near term set back, as it is expected to beat the broader market's growth as far as the eye can see. (click to enlarge) Yet there is more than earnings growth to consider when sizing up a company as a potential investment. How do the three compare against one another in other metrics, and which makes the best investment? Let's answer that by comparing their company fundamentals using the following format: a) financial comparisons, b) estimates and analyst recommendations, and c) rankings with accompanying data table. As we compare each metric, the best performing company will be shaded green while the worst performing will be shaded yellow, which will later be tallied for the final ranking. A) Financial Comparisons • Market Capitalization: While company size does not necessarily imply an advantage and is thus not ranked, it is important as a denominator against which other financial data will be compared for ranking. (click to enlarge) • Growth: Since revenues and expenses can vary greatly from one season to another, growth is measured on a year-over-year quarterly basis, where Q1 of this year is compared to Q1 of the previous year, for example. In the most recently reported quarter, Trulia delivered the greatest revenue growth year-over-year at an exceptional degree, while Spark delivered the least, even shrinkage along with United. Since none of the companies' trailing earnings growth is available, the metric cannot factor into the comparison. (click to enlarge) • Profitability: A company's margins are important in determining how much profit the company generates from its sales. Operating margin indicates the percentage earned after operating costs, such as labor, materials, and overhead. Profit margin indicates the profit left over after operating costs plus all other costs, including debt, interest, taxes and depreciation. Of our three contestants, Spark operated with the widest profit margin while United operated with the widest operating margin. At the narrow end of the scale, United and Trulia contended with the narrowest margins. It is worth noting that all three companies reported negative margins, denoting loss by all. (click to enlarge) • Management Effectiveness: Shareholders are keenly interested in management's ability to do more with what has been given to it. Management's effectiveness is measured by the returns generated from the assets under its control, and from the equity invested into the company by shareholders. For their managerial performance, United's management team delivered the greatest returns on assets where Trulia's team delivered the greatest returns on equity. At the low end of the spectrum, Spark's team delivered the least. Here again it is worth noting that all three companies reported negative returns, denoting loss of assets and equity by all three. (click to enlarge) • Earnings Per Share: Of all the metrics measuring a company's income, earnings per share is probably the most meaningful to shareholders, as this represents the value that the company is adding to each share outstanding. Since the number of shares outstanding varies from company to company, I prefer to convert EPS into a percentage of the current stock price to better determine where an investment could gain the most value. Of the three companies here compared, Trulia provides common stock holders with the greatest diluted earnings per share gain as a percentage of its current share price, while United's DEPS over current stock price is lowest, even negative denoting loss. And of course, here again all three companies' figures are negative, denoting loss. (click to enlarge) • Share Price Value: Even if a company outperforms its peers on all the above metrics, however, investors may still shy away from its stock if its price is already trading too high. This is where the stock price relative to forward earnings and company book value come under scrutiny, as well as the stock price relative to earnings relative to earnings growth, known as the PEG ratio. Lower ratios indicate the stock price is currently trading at a cheaper price than its peers, and might thus be a bargain. Among our three combatants, United's stock is cheapest relative to company book value, while Trulia's is cheapest relative to 5-year PEG. At the overpriced end of the scale, Spark's stock is the most overvalued relative to company book, where United's is most overpriced relative to PEG. Since Spark's price to forward earnings is not available, the metric does not factor into the comparison, though it is worth noting that Trulia's price to forward earnings is tremendously overpriced compared to United's. (click to enlarge) B) Estimates and Analyst Recommendations Of course, no matter how skilled we perceive ourselves to be at gauging a stock's prospects as an investment, we'd be wise to at least consider what professional analysts and the companies themselves are projecting - including estimated future earnings per share and the growth rate of those earnings, stock price targets, and buy/sell recommendations. • Earnings Estimates: To properly compare estimated future earnings per share across multiple companies, we would need to convert them into a percentage of their stocks' current prices. Of our three specimens, United offers the highest percentage of earnings over current stock price for all time periods. At the low end of the scale, Trulia offers the lowest percentages for next quarter (shrinkage even), while Spark offers it for all remaining periods (with shrinkage for 2015). (click to enlarge) • Earnings Growth: For long-term investors this metric is one of the most important to consider, as it denotes the percentage by which earnings are expected to grow or shrink as compared to earnings from corresponding periods a year prior. For earnings growth, Spark offers the greatest growth in the current quarter, United offers it next quarter, where Trulia offers it in 2015 and beyond. At the low end of the spectrum, Trulia offers the slowest growth prospects over the near term (with some shrinkage), United offers it in 2015, while both United and Spark are tied for slowest growth annually over the next five years. (click to enlarge) • Price Targets: Like earnings estimates above, a company's stock price targets must also be converted into a percentage of its current price to properly compare multiple companies. For their high, mean and low price targets over the coming 12 months, analysts believe Spark's stock offers the greatest upside potential and least downside risk, while United's stock offers the least upside and Trulia's offers the greatest downside. It must be noted, however, that United's and Spark's stocks are already trading below their low targets. While this may mean increased potential for sharp moves upward, it may warrant reassessments of future expectations. It must also be noted that United and Spark each has only one broker making a prognostication, potentially limiting the targets' accuracy. (click to enlarge) • Buy/Sell Recommendations: After all is said and done, perhaps the one gauge that sums it all up are analyst recommendations. These have been converted into the percentage of analysts recommending each level. However, I factor only the strong buy and buy recommendations into the ranking. Hold, underperform and sell recommendations are not ranked since they are determined after determining the winners of the strong buy and buy categories, and would only be negating those winners of their duly earned titles. Of our three contenders, United is best recommended with 0 strong buy and 2 buys representing a combined 100% of its 2 analysts, followed by Spark with 1 strong buy and 0 buy ratings representing 50% of its 2 analysts, and lastly by Trulia with 0 strong buy and 1 buy recommendation representing 11.11% of its 9 analysts. (click to enlarge) C) Rankings Having crunched all the numbers and compared all the projections, the time has come to tally up the wins and losses and rank our three competitors against one another. In the table below you will find all of the data considered above plus a few others not reviewed. Here is where using a company's market cap as a denominator comes into play, as much of the data in the table has been converted into a percentage of market cap for a fair comparison. The first and last placed companies are shaded. We then add together each company's finishes to determine its overall ranking, with first place finishes counting as merits while last place finishes count as demerits. (click to enlarge) And the winner is… United in a class all by itself, outperforming in 14 metrics and underperforming in 7 for a net score of +7, followed far behind by both Trulia and Spark in a tie at -4 a piece. Where the Internet Services Providers industry is expected to outperform the S&P broader market substantially this quarter, underperform significantly next quarter, then outperform significantly in 2015 and beyond, the three largest U.S. companies in the space are expected to outgrow the broader market in earnings at pretty impressive rates - with Spark growing as much as 8.29 times next quarter, United growing as much as 13.97 times next quarter, and Trulia growing as much as 21.63 times the S&P's average growth rate in 2015. Yet after taking all company fundamentals into account, United Online, Inc. brings investors together given its lowest stock price to company book value, highest cash and revenue over market cap, lowest debt over market cap, widest operating margin, highest return on assets, highest EBITDA over market cap and revenue, highest future earnings over current stock price in all periods, highest future earnings growth next quarter, and most analyst buy recommendations - decisively winning the Internet Service Providers industry competition. Editor's Note: This article covers one or more stocks trading at less than $1 per share and/or with less than a $100 million market cap. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks. Disclosure: The author has no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. The author wrote this article themselves, and it expresses their own opinions. The author is not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). The author has no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. (More...)

This was the Internet’s worst, best year ever


This year was a hugely momentous one in the evolution of the global network of networks we call the Internet. Since its creation as a side project of a handful of academics and military researchers in the United States some 50 years ago, the Internet has grown to encompass the whole world. But 2014 was in many ways a mixed bag for the Internet. It showed the Internet at its strongest, reaching more people, more ways than at any point in the past. But at the same time, it has also never been more threatened by everything from hackers to censors to autocrats newly attuned to the power of the online world. 1) The Internet has never been less free. In its early days, the Internet was thought of as a place where people around the world could live according to the principles of free expression and self-determination. But every year it is falling shorter of that ideal. The pro-democracy group Freedom House tallies global metrics for all sorts of online freedom, from the ability to experience an uncensored Internet to the healthy treatment of women online. In 2014, that scored dropped for the fourth year in a row. That said... 2) A tremendous number of people came online for the first time this year. The number of regular Internet users grew by about 250 million people in just the last 12 months. That's like adding the entire population of the United States to the online world all at once -- or the number of people living in all of Russia, France, Kenya, and South Korea combined. More people connected means more of them benefiting from the wealth of what's available online. On the other hand... 3) Even democracies abused the Internet. A March report from the group Reporters Without Borders identified government bodies around the world that are actively engaged in spying on what happens online. Some aren't surprising: Pakistan's main telecomm agency, North Korea's science branch, or China's chief information office. But that others exist within the confines of the planet's most celebrated democracies -- from the Centre for Development of Telematics in India to the National Security Agency in the United States -- reveals, says the group, a worrisome global "schizophrenic attitude" towards surveillance. And yet... 4) The rights of the online citizen were enshrined. Five years ago, Brazil's ministry of justice and the country's legal community began work on a sort of Internet bill of rights for the people of that nation. This year, the product of that work, called the Marco Civil da Internet, was signed into law. It guarantees, among other things, the citizen's right to a robust Internet connection and strong online privacy protections. The first of its kind in the world, the landmark law stands up for the idea that online rights are to be cherished and protected like any other set of civil rights. But... 5) Other countries turned informal Internet crackdowns into official rules and laws. In Russia, where bloggers are often some of the few voices speaking out against the Kremlin, new rules were adopted requiring those with even modest online followings to submit to the same restrictions as the mainstream media. In post-coup d'Ă©tat Thailand, the military ordered Internet service providers to submit to its dictates. And in Somalia, the al-Shabab militia went one step further: in the parts of the country it controls, it formally banned the Internet altogether. Still... 6) The World Wide Web passed the billion domain mark. In the early days of the World Wide Web -- the Internet's killer app -- there were so few Web sites that aficionados would hand-curate directories of everything that was neat, intriguing, or simply just available online. Just two decades later, it would take someone typing out a similar list of everything available online about 150 years. Barely into adulthood, the World Wide Web is remarkably robust and only getting more so. On the other hand... 7) Hackers exposed the Internet's fundamental insecurities. No matter if it was the work of North Korea, disgruntled ex-employees, or other hackers, the recent breaching of Sony's computer networks was eye-opening. The Internet was built on trust. But it became inescapably clear this year just how far some are willing go to turn it into a global battleground. And the initial decision not to screen the movie at the center of the hack revealed that, when it comes to responding to online threats that move offline, we are frighteningly unprepared. Even so... 8) Millions of people in the United States voiced their opinions on "net neutrality." Whatever side of the debate over the fair treatment of online content you are on, the unprecedented nearly 4 million comments received by regulators at the Federal Communications Commission were a remarkable display of how the once obscure policy issue has captured the attention of the American public. And while this was only the U.S. making laws, given the prime role the U.S. plays in the Internet, people all around the world paid close attention to its outcome. Nonetheless... 9) Governments moved to splinter off their own piece of the digital world. More and more, leaders decided that it's easier for them to shape what happens online if they make sure that a greater part of it takes place within their borders. Some in Germany and Europe, for example, began entertaining the idea of a so-called "Schengen Zone" where Europeans' digital data, from e-mails to social media traffic, would be housed on servers within the confines of that continent. The Internet is one of the few things the people of the world share without regard to political boundaries. But increasingly dividing lines that carve up the rest of our lives are being imposed upon it. Hang on... 10) Fighting for the Internet drove people into the streets. In Mexico in April, thousands formed a human chain to object to a telecommunications bill that would, among other things, allow the shutting down of the Internet during political protests. In Bolivia in May, activists crawled through roadways dressed as snails to protest slow Internet speeds. And in Hungary in October, people threw computers into the streets to protest a proposed tax on Internet use. The Hungarians won: the government backed down from the idea. In 2014, people around the world were willing to defend the Internet like any other political value they hold dear. That, in fact, people seemed to have never been more passionate about the fate of the Internet is perhaps, the one main lesson from this past year in the Internet's life. And that likely bodes well for its future. Nancy Scola is a reporter who covers the intersections of technology and public policy, politics, and governance.

Finance Ministry turns down Home Ministry's demand for Rs 1500 crore


NEW DELHI: The Home Ministry on Thursday went into fire-fighting mode after a letter written by it to all states was revealed which said the Finance Ministry has denied it an additional Rs 1500 crore allocation for police modernization funds at the Revised Expenditure (RE) stage. Home Minister Rajnath Singh had earlier last year pushed for the Modernisation of Police Forces (MPF) Scheme funds to be doubled from Rs 1500 crore to Rs 3000 crore. The same was announced by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in his maiden budget speech. "The additional allocation of Rs 1500 crore as per Budget 2014-15 announcement has not been provided under the MPF Scheme at RE stage. Therefore, additional state action plans received from various states will not be considered during the current financial year," says the Home Ministry letter of December 29 written to Director General of Police (DGPs) and Principal Home Secretaries of all states and marked to the Union Home Secretary and all Joint Secretaries in Home Ministry. This letter was duly uploaded on the Home Ministry website on Thursday. When asked about the reasons for the denial of the additional funds, a Home Ministry spokesperson told ET that the RE decisions had "still not been communicated" to the Home Ministry. "There seems to be some mistake in the letter...the same is being withdrawn from the website. The assumption about the funds not being provided at RE stage may be based on discussions," the spokesperson said. The letter however clearly says that the additional action plans submitted by various states for the MPF fund "will not be considered during the current financial year and may be merged/absorbed in the action plans for 2015-16". A government source said non-submission of plans by some states or the non-utilisation of the existing grant by states may be a factor for the Finance Ministry to not clear the additional grant this year. The Home Ministry in a letter to all states on September 4 had informed them that the Finance Minister in his budget speech had proposed to enhance the allocation for the MPF Scheme from a sum of Rs 1500 crore to Rs 3000 crore during 2014-15. "However, the enhanced allocation may be made available at RE 2014-15, provided the states are able to provide Utilisation certificates for the previous releases and the allocation already made during 2014-15 is fully released to states," the September 4 letter said. In another letter to states on October 22, the Home Ministry had said that proposals from many states on how to spend the additional funds were still to be received. "It may be stated that any further delay in submission of the proposals for 2014-15 may adversely impact the approval process/timelines and affect the timely release of funds," the Home Ministry wrote on October 22 to all states.